GENRE CRITICISM
The Last Song
By Nicholas Sparks
Synopsis:
The Last Song is the story of Ronnie Miller and the summer that she spends
with her father at Wrightsville Beach. At the start of the summer, she is a
rebellious 17 year old who resents her parents for their messy divorce; she is
particularly annoyed that she is being forced to spend the summer with her
estranged father, to whom she has not spoken in three years. She is so angry
that she has abandoned the one thing that she and her father used to share in
common — playing the piano. She has no desire to spend the summer in North
Carolina; she has no desire to get to know Will Blakelee, the good-looking
beach volleyball player who literally bumps into her during her first day in
the South; and she has no desire to reconnect with the father who walked away
from her, her mother, and her brother. However, a run-in with the wrong crowd
combined with a nest of endangered loggerhead turtle eggs results in Ronnie's
unexpected maturation. The summer she initially dreaded ends up being an
opportunity for her to learn about faith, family, and love.

Analysis:
sharply individualized believable
characters and
a pervasive illusion of reality. This novel is a very inspiring and interesting
novel to read. Also, this is a genre criticism theory because this is divided
into chapters and cannot be read in just one sitting.
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